The $200,000 cow grabs the headline, but Blondin’s $11,930 average — 54 lots over $10K — is the real tell: this is what a disciplined show-breeding program is worth.
Executive Summary: Blondin Salute Shatter, a VG-87 Winter 2-Year-Old from the home-bred SUPRA family, topped the 2026 Blondin Elite Sale at $200,000 to Reuter Dairy (RJR Holsteins) and John Cannon of Iowa — but the $11,930 average on a catalogue this deep is the number that actually matters. The sale grossed north of $2 million, with 54 lots clearing $10,000 and eight past $30,000, so the money ran the length of the catalogue rather than piling onto two or three marquee cows. The throughline is a one-bull bet: Simone Lalande bred nearly everything to Hamming Salute, and those matched, predictable udders showed up on the top of the board — lots 140 ($50K), 107 ($45K), and 55 ($32K) all trace to him. Shatter herself sold as much for her flush capacity (101 oocytes May 6, another 62 June 17) as her show résumé, which is exactly why a top show-ring partnership paid donor-program money. Watch the convergence signal too: Drewholme Logic Be Still P, a +3986 GLPI polled heifer, sold third-high at $72,000, proving the type and index buyers are now bidding in the same room. If you breed registered show cattle, the takeaway is direct — a deep, decorated cow family committed to a consistent sire over years is what builds a $200K topper and a $12K average, not chasing the hot bull of the season. Read the full piece if you want the lot-by-lot pedigrees and all the details behind the numbers.
The headline number will get quoted everywhere — $200,000 for a Winter 2-Year-Old — but that’s not the real story of this year’s Blondin Elite Sale. The real story is a herd that has bet almost everything on one bull and a handful of ancestral cow families, and a room full of buyers who paid up to agree with the bet.
A $11,930 average on a catalogue this deep isn’t a fluke. It’s a strategy showing up on the clerk sheet.
The top line

Blondin reported a $11,930 CDN across the offering, with the sale grossing north of $2 million. Strip out the embryo packages and the live-animal average firms up right around the $12,000 mark — a genuinely strong number for a single-session summer sale that leaned show-type rather than index-chasing.
Depth is where it gets interesting. This wasn’t one rocket pulling up a flat field:
- 54 lots cleared $10,000
- 25 lots hit $15,000 or more
- 13 lots made $20,000+
- 8 lots landed at $30,000 or above
That’s the shape of a healthy pedigree market. The tail carried real weight, which tells you the buying wasn’t confined to two or three marquee families — it ran the length of the catalogue.
Top of the board
| Lot | Animal | Sire | Key backing | Price |
| 15 | Blondin Salute Shatter VG-87-2YR (MS:89) | Hamming Salute | Blondin Doorman Saratoga EX-93 → the SUPRA family | $200,000 |
| 29 | Crater Camo Lambda VG-85-2YR | Farnear Delta-Lambda | Silvermaple Damion Camomile EX-95 | $80,000 |
| 3 | Drewholme Logic Be Still P VG-86-2YR | Drewholme Logic PP | +3986 GLPI, polled, +16 Conf | $72,000 |
| 1 | Maifield Lambda Monique VG-87-2YR | Farnear Delta-Lambda | 10 generations VG or EX | $70,000 |
| 140 | Famipage Salute Aquila | Hamming Salute | BVK Atwood Arianna EX-94 (Kingstead Chief Adeen) | $50,000 |
| 107 | Blondin Salute Tearful | Hamming Salute | +15 Conf; Allegro Destiny Touche family | $45,000 |
| 30 | Mer-James Alpha Atlas | Alpha | Out of Non-Stop; Royal red-family pedigree | $40,000 |
| 55 | Blondin Salut Lyanna | Hamming Salute | Clayhaven Crushabull Lysanna EX-94 | $32,000 |
Notice the sire column. Six of the top eight trace their top-line to two bulls — Hamming Salute and Farnear Delta-Lambda — and that’s not an accident.
The $200,000 cow: Salute Shatter and the Supra dynasty

Lot 15, Blondin Salute Shatter, sold to Reuter Dairy (RJR Holsteins) and John Cannon of Iowa for the sale-topping $200,000. On paper she’s a VG-87 Winter 2-Year-Old with an MS:89 mammary — good, not eye-watering, if you only read the classification line. But nobody paid $200,000 for the score. They paid for the address.
Shatter is a Hamming Salute daughter out of Blondin Doorman Saratoga EX-93-4 (MS:94)*, and that Saratoga cow is the current flagbearer for the SUPRA family — Blondin’s home-bred maternal dynasty that runs back through Blondin R Marker Sublime EX-93, Blondin Skychief Supra EX-93 (35*), and Blondin James Supra EX-90. When Brian Carscadden told the parade crowd, “you’ll know what the super cow family means to this farm,” he wasn’t being sentimental. He was pricing the lot.
Two things pushed her past the field. First, the show-and-breed résumé is already forming — 3rd Winter 2-Yr-Old at the Quebec Spring Show and 4th at ON Spring Discovery, with a genomic profile (GLPI 3034, CONF +11) that keeps her relevant to buyers who care about both the colored shavings and the classifier’s clipboard. Second — and this is the part the casual observer misses — she flushes like a machine. The catalogue documents 101 oocytes on May 6 and another 62 on June 17. For a partnership like Reuter/Cannon, that’s not one cow; that’s a donor program with a show-ring insurance policy attached. She’s fresh (Nov. 1, 2025) and carrying a Detective-sexed pregnancy due Feb. 18, 2027.
The Saratoga family reinforced its own value right behind her. Eye Candy Salana (Lot 21), a maternal sister to Shatter out of that same Saratoga cow, brought $22,000, and the embryo packages off Shatter and Saratoga — Lambda- and Detective-sexed — moved for $2,000 to $3,800 apiece. When a family carries three separate selling positions in one sale and they all find money, that’s the market validating the cow family, not just the individual.
Salute: the herd’s one-bull bet pays off
Here’s the throughline nobody can miss walking the barn: Simone Lalande bred everything to Salute. Carscadden said it flat out during the parade — at one point there were 85 to 90 Salute daughters on the ground, and “anything not related to Salute is bred to Salute.” That’s a level of single-sire commitment most breeders would call reckless. This sale is the argument that it wasn’t.
Hamming Salute (a Siemers Rozume son from the Hammingview Doorman Sunshine EX-93 family) delivered the two things a type herd sells on — rump structure and mammary — and buyers rewarded the consistency:
- Lot 15 Salute Shatter — $200,000
- Lot 140 Famipage Salute Aquila — $50,000
- Lot 107 Salute Tearful (+15 Conformation) — $45,000
- Lot 55 Salut Lyanna (out of the Crushabull Lysanna EX-94 cow) — $32,000
- Plus a string of Salute daughters and Salute-bred lots peppered through the $10,000–$17,500 range (Carmeli, Gooseberry, Lolleena, Teardown, Shallow).
The lesson for a type breeder reading this: Salute didn’t win because he’s the highest-index bull in the barn — he isn’t. He won because he stamps a predictable, saleable udder onto a deep cow family, and predictability is what a pedigree buyer is actually paying for. A barn full of one sire’s daughters, all classifying VG in first lactation with matched mammaries, is a marketing asset. Blondin turned a genetic decision into a brand.
Show-proven maternal lines carried the premiums
Below the Salutes, the pattern held: the deeper and more decorated the maternal line, the harder the lot sold.
Lot 29, Crater Camo Lambda ($80,000) — second-high seller — is a fresh 2nd-calf Fall 2-Year-Old (Max-scored 89 pts) tracing to Silvermaple Damion Camomile EX-95, the All-Canadian, All-American, and Reserve Grand WDE 2011 cow. She’s a Lambda daughter on a Sidekick dam, and she checks the modern box too (GLPI 3361, CONF +12). That’s the ideal show-sale package in 2026 — a proven All-World cow family, a fashionable type sire stack, and a genomic line that doesn’t apologize.

Lot 1, Maifield Lambda Monique VG-87 ($70,000) opened the sale and sold on pure pedigree architecture: 10 consecutive generations classified VG or EX, out of the Maifield Doorman Monica EX-90 → Alexander Morgan → Adeen/Roxanne tribe. She’d already banked a strong show record as a 2-year-old — 1st Winter 2-Yr-Old, Reserve Intermediate Champion and H.M. Grand Champion at ON Spring Discovery 2026 — and had just been raised to a maximum mammary score of 88 points. Ten straight generations of appraisal is the kind of maternal certainty a serious breeder will pay a premium to plug into, and the buyer did.
Lot 140, Famipage Salute Aquila ($50,000) — the Salute summer 2-year-old — reaches back to BVK Atwood Arianna EX-94 (All-Canadian & All-American Jr. 2-Yr 2012) through the Kingstead Chief Adeen dynasty, one of the most reliable brood-cow families on the continent. Bred by Famipage, a prefix that had a banner year at the Royal, she’s exactly the kind of “borrowed heat” consignment that lifts a sale.

Lot 30, Mer-James Alpha Atlas ($40,000) was the red statement of the day — an Alpha daughter out of a Non-Stop dam, from a family with red-and-white show pedigree, and a Junior 3-Year-Old that Max-scored 89. Red enthusiasts have gotten more disciplined about what they’ll pay up for; a genuine show-quality red from a winning family still clears $40K.
The genomic outlier: Drewholme Logic Be Still P

One lot broke the type-first mold, and it’s worth flagging for anyone who assumes Blondin only sells pretty cows. Lot 3, Drewholme Logic Be Still P ($72,000), was the sale’s genomic-and-polled play — a VG-86 2-year-old the catalogue billed as the only cow in the breed at +3986 GLPI with +16 Conformation, the #9 GLPI cow in Canadaand #5 GLPI polled cow (she also carries a +2943 GTPI on the U.S. scale). She’s a Logic PP daughter carrying the polled gene, tracing to Drewholme Lambda Leysure P EX-92 (dam of Leyton P and Logic at Blondin Sires), and — notably — she sold in absentee as a package with a buyer’s choice of 15 embryos, bred to a sexed Has It All. Consigned by Drewholme Holsteins, she landed third-high, ahead of several higher-classified show cows. That’s a small but real signal: even at a self-consciously show-type sale, the polled-plus-index buyer showed up with a full wallet. Type and index are converging faster than the show side of the industry sometimes admits.
JM Valley: the featured guest that earned top billing
This wasn’t just a Blondin sale — the catalogue cover read “The Finest of Blondin, JM Valley & Select Guest Consignments,” and JM Valley backed up the billing with the single largest guest string of the day: 32 head that grossed roughly $214,500 and averaged just under $8,000. That’s a serious block to move in one session, and the depth of the cow families is why it cleared. JM Valley’s consignment leaned on some of the most decorated brood cows in the book — JM Valley Sidekick Lady EX-95 (MS:96), JM Valley Chief Lyza EX-91, and the Idee Windbrook Lynzi EX-95 tribe — the kind of families that produce show winners and sell daughters for a living.

The top of their run showed real range. Lot 112, JM Valley Lambda Libye, led the string at $17,500, followed by Lot 45, Anahita Lisandre at $13,500 (out of the Windbrook Lynzi family) and Lot 132, Lambda Simone at $13,000. Below the headliners, JM Valley kept finding money the whole way down — Bullseye Lilia ($12,500), Eye Candy Helena ($10,000), and a deep middle of $6,000–$9,400 heifers off Lambda, Eye Candy, Destination, and Anahita. For a guest consignor to place a 30-plus-head draft into a host’s elite sale and have it perform across the full price range — not just at the top — tells you two things: the cattle were right, and the two operations share the same type philosophy their buyers already trust.
Who was in the room
A sale average is only as good as the buyers standing behind it, and this crowd was a who’s-who. The sale-topper landed with Reuter Dairy (RJR Holsteins) and John Cannon of Iowa — a partnership that competes at the sharpest end of the North American show ring and knows exactly what a SUPRA-bred donor is worth. Guest consignments came from operations of the same pedigree: Budjon Farms and Heartland stood behind the Eyes On You / Ladyrose Caught Your Eye embryo lot, Drewholme Holsteins brought the polled genomic play, and Famipage, Fleury, and Yvon Sicard — prefixes that have been winning banners and building families for years — added the kind of outside heat that only turns up when the host has the reputation to attract it.
That matters more than any single hammer price. When the best breeders and marketers on the continent — the people who set type trends rather than follow them — show up in person and bid against each other, the numbers aren’t a bubble. They’re a peer-reviewed verdict on the cattle. Every marquee lot cleared its money live, in the ring, with real competition. This was a room full of people who make their living reading cattle, and they voted with their checkbooks.
The read for a pedigree breeder
Three takeaways worth pinning up in the office:
- A committed sire strategy is a marketing strategy. Blondin’s near-total investment in Salute created a barn of matched, predictable udders — and predictability is what commands premiums when a type buyer bids. If you’re scattering semen across ten bulls chasing the flavor of the month, you’re diluting the exact consistency that this sale monetized.
- The cow family still writes the top of the check. Every six-figure and near-six-figure lot traced to a decorated maternal line — Supra, Camomile, the 10-generation Monique tribe, Atwood Arianna. Genomics and a fashionable sire got animals into the conversation; the deep, show-proven pedigree is what finished the sale.
- The type/index gap is narrowing. A +2943 GTPI polled heifer selling third-high at a show sale is the tell. The buyers with the deepest pockets increasingly want the cow that can do both — win a class and survive an evaluation. The families that can offer that duality are the ones that will keep clearing these numbers.
So here’s the practical move if you breed show cattle and want a sale like this one someday: pick your deepest, most-decorated cow family, commit to a sire that stamps a consistent, saleable udder onto it, and give it years — not one breeding season — to compound. Then invite the right people to the barn. Blondin didn’t get to a $200,000 topper by chasing a hot bull or a hot heifer. They got there by building something a room full of the best breeders on the continent recognized on sight.
Blondin ran a clean event and moved a deep catalogue. More importantly, they proved that a coherent breeding philosophy, executed with discipline over years, is still the most valuable thing you can put in a sale ring. The $200,000 cow was the exclamation point. The $12,000 average was the actual sentence.
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